American Academy of Medicine & Surgery
Programs and Fellowships for High School and Premedical College Students
The Trauma, Acute and Critical Care Surgery Internship is a week-long course designed to provide students with a more in-depth study of surgical specialties in addition to clinical practice. Students will gain knowledge, skills, and certifications (including accredited American Heart Association training) that are routinely taught at the medical school and residency levels as mandatory requirements; these skills will be of use as you continue through your medical careers. This course is for students who are interested in medicine and interested in acquiring skills that can be used in any situation. Accidents happen and trauma situations are not planned. You can be in your car, you can be at a concert or a restaurant and find yourself in a situation where medical care needs to be given. The American College of Surgeons believe that lives can be saved if bleeding is recognized and can be stopped until help arrives. This course will describe basic physiology of a bleeding patient and outline the steps to take and provide a practical experience in order to be prepared for the unexpected. At the end of the course, the student will receive their certification for BLS, ACLS and BCON (pending passing of tests). The course will be taught directly by AAMS surgeons, including Dr. Lydia Lam, an Assistant Professor of Clinical Surgery and Emergency Medicine at Los Angeles County-University of Southern California Medical Center in the Division of Trauma, Acute Care Surgery, and Surgical Critical Care which is the busiest trauma center on the west coast. For the summer of 2021, this program will run for the week directly following the Advanced Cardiothoracic Surgical Skills Conference (ACSSC), so students may enroll in both during the same summer. There are no pre-requisites to attend this program.
* Asian American Medical Society is not affiliated with American Academy of Medicine and Surgery